Ernie :
I also am very favorably impressed  with  Douthat. You were the first to
"discover" him, but I feel that I discovered him also, since  there were
a number of his articles that I came across  --and regarded as  top 
quality--
unprompted by anything you said at the time. Anyway, a Radical  Centrist
in everything but name. Maybe we should 'baptize' him in absentia.
 
Gotta, "think Mormon" these days, to be au current.
 
All of this said, I do have some problems with Douthat.
 
This sometimes, as in the present case, reflects his youth. Maybe Chris  can

vouch for this, but if you were alive and well in the late 60s and  
throughout  the 70s
it was impossible not to come in contact with Hindu swamis, with  people
( many Anglo ) who were promoting Buddhism, especially Zen, and
with an assortment of "others, "  New Agers of various descriptions  mostly,
who might be "into" just about anything, from American Indian  spirituality
to UFO cultism to new revelations based on Zoroastrianism.
 
At least this is to talk about my experiences in those years in  
Massachusetts
and Arizona. Much of that time I was teaching in Kentucky and this  was
also true there,   but not to the extent in Az and Mass.
 
But generally the circles I moved in were open to ideas from the Mysterious 
 East,
particularly Tibet, often enough India, and to Americans who were  
transforming
themselves via attempted syntheses of, say, Buddhism and  Christianity.  A 
large
number of people were Jews,  --seeking new religious identities--  but 
close by
were many liberal Protestants and adventuresome Catholics.  Or  
non-religious
folks discovering religion ( in any form ) for the first time.
 
This social phenomenon still exists, but not as the large scale revival it  
was 
in the 60s - 70s era.  To it has been added Neo-Pagan ideas and  beliefs, 
plus 
Goddess veneration in a variety of forms, some Biblical, and ethnic /  
cultural 
rediscoveries of  different kinds, like new interest in Celtic arts  and 
traditions, 
sometimes indulged in by people who are not remotely Irish or Scots or  
Welsh.
 
In other words, and while his book may delve into these themes,
about these factors, which for me are important, Douthat seems to ignore 
them all. That would be like, to use a sociology analogy, discussing
American demography without discussing racial diversity. One's
generalizations could only be true to the extent that they are  "about"
a dominant group. They could not apply across the board to include
the one-third or so who are non-Anglo.
 
Same principle when the subject is religion. Yes, to the extent that  
Americans
are religious believers, say 30% in a dedicated sense, 30 % lukewarm,  and
the rest on the periphery or not at all, most, by far, are Christian of one 
 kind
or another, with a Jewish minority of long standing. But how well does  this
kind of model reflect what one easily sees in just about every university  
town
in the country, not to mention entire small cities in California, the  
entire state 
of Hawaii, and populous enclaves in places like New Mexico,
Illinois, Michigan, Florida, and Texas ?
 
In other words, there simply cannot be a return to Christian  orthodoxy
as Douthat desires. Because that orthodoxy simply does not have a  place
in it for interfaith ecumenism. At least as I see it, this simply is  not 
there.
 
Where it does exist, as in many "liberal" churches and among Reform Jews, 
the religion practiced only bears passing resemblance to orthodoxy /  
Orthodoxy.
 
This, to me, is the central problem, or , anyway, one of only 2 or  3 
Central Problems
( the others being sex and secularism ).
 
Just try and "add" interfaith ecumenism to your typical Baptist church or  
Catholic diocese
or Conservative Jewish congregation and what do you get ?   A lot  of 
unhappy people
who simply will not agree with the new approach.  Well, that may be  well 
and good
for over-60s, maybe for a lot of 40s and 50s, but the young are less and  
less willing
to buy into the traditional paradigm. This presents major difficulties  for
any kind of orthodoxy. The orthodox  must adapt to new social /  cultural 
realities
but their religious ideology  --to call it that--  is mostly  irrelevant
to these new factors. 
 
What, then, does a Baptist church, or community church, or etc, DO
to make itself relevant under these circumstances ?  Answer  :  What you
don't do is try and inculcate the young to take the view that the  Hindus
they know in school are all devil worshippers, or that the Chinese
they know at work are all followers of "false religions," or anything 
of the kind. Sure, you can insist on exactly this, but the point is
that this guarantees the loss of a lot of young people.
 
As much as I think Douthat's heart is in the right place
I don't see where he even begins to deal with this issue.
You can argue that he is relevant when it comes to
values issues that go along with sex and secularism,
if not perfectly, to some extent, but I don't see this
with respect to non-traditional faiths in America.
 
We are alive, it may be said, in a new era of Hellenism.
 
Billy
 
=========================================
 
 
 
 
4/17/2012 11:20:47 A.M. Pacific Daylight Time, [email protected]  
writes:

Wow.  Brilliant article.  I agree with basically all of it.  


The title is a bit misleading, in that it sounds like he's advocating a  
simple return to orthodoxy a la the Bible thumpers.


He isn't.  He is advocating we return to our roots in order to build  
stronger institutions.


I've actually spend the last month figuring out how to reinvent the  church 
and the university; I'm still working on the corporation. :-)  Remind me to 
post my results sometime...


-- Ernie p.


On Apr 17, 2012, at 9:39 AM, [email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected])  
wrote:




Christianity Today
 
 
 
Q & A: Ross Douthat on Rooting Out  Bad Religion
Why the New York Times columnist wants  to see America return to its 
confessional roots.
Interview by Sarah Pulliam Bailey  | posted 4/16/2012

    
_Bad Religion: How We Became a Nation of  Heretics_ 
(http://www.christianbook.com/Christian/Books/product?item_no=WW178300&p=1006327)
 
by Ross Douthat
Free Press, April  2012
352 pp., $26.00 
The biggest threat facing America is not a faltering economy  or a spate of 
books by famed atheists. Rather, the country meets new  challenges due to 
the decline of traditional Christianity, New York Times columnist Ross 
Douthat suggests in  _Bad Religion: How We Became a Nation of Heretics_ 
(http://www.christianbook.com/Christian/Books/product?item_no=WW178300&p=1006327)
   
(Free Press). Douthat has taken his own personal tour of American  
Christianity: he was baptized Episcopalian, attended evangelical and  
Pentecostal 
churches as a child, and converted to Catholicism at age 17. He  argues that 
prosperity preachers, self-esteem gurus, and politics operating  as religion 
contribute to the contemporary decline of America. CT spoke with  Douthat about 
America's decline from a vigorous faith, modern heretics, and  why we need 
a revival of traditional Christianity.  
What do you mean when you say we're facing the threat of  heresy? 
I try to use an ecumenical definition, starting with what I  see as the 
theological common ground shared by my own Catholic Church and  many Protestant 
denominations. Then I look at forms of American religion  that are 
influenced by Christianity, but depart in some significant way from  this 
consensus. 
It's a C. S. Lewisian, Mere  Christianity definition of orthodoxy or 
heresy. I'm trying to look at  the ways the American religion today departs 
from 
theological and moral  premises that traditional Protestants and Catholics 
have in common. 
How did America become a nation of heretics? 
We've always been a nation of heretics. Heresy used to be  constrained and 
balanced by institutional Christianity to a far greater  extent than it is 
today. What's unique about our religious moment is not the  movements and 
currents such as the "lost gospel" industry, the world of  prosperity 
preaching, the kind of therapeutic religion that you get from  someone like 
Oprah 
Winfrey, or various highly politicized forms of faith.  What's new is the 
weakness of the orthodox Christian response. There were  prosperity preachers 
and 
therapeutic religion in the 1940s and '50s—think of  bestsellers like 
Norman Vincent Peale's The Power of  Positive Thinking—but there was also a 
much 
more robust Christian  center.  
The Protestant and Catholic churches that made a real effort  to root their 
doctrine and practice in historic Christianity were vastly  stronger than 
they are today. Even someone who was dabbling in what I call  heresy was also 
more likely to have something in his religious life—some  institutional or 
confessional pressure—tugging him back toward a more  traditional faith. The 
influence of heretics has been magnified by the  decline of orthodox 
Christianity.  
Have evangelicals created a fertile ground for heresy?  
People have asked, "Don't all the trends that you describe go  back to the 
Protestant Reformation?" Since I am a Roman Catholic, I do have  sympathy 
for that argument [laughs]. But it's important not to leap to a  historical 
determinism about theological and cultural trends. Some of the  trends might 
represent the working out of ideas inherent in Protestantism or  grow out of 
religious individualism that is more Protestant than Catholic.  But I don't 
think it was necessarily inevitable that we reached this point.  It's a long 
way from Martin Luther's On the Freedom of  a Christian to Eat, Pray, Love, 
and a  vigorous Protestantism should be able to prevent the former from  
degenerating into the latter. 
You suggest that Christian leaders from earlier decades  contributed to the 
decline of traditional Christianity by trying to  accommodate cultural 
norms. Would you consider Oprah, Glenn Beck, and others  to be today's 
accommodationists? 
We're in a slightly different era today. There were tremendous  cultural 
challenges to Christianity in the 1960s and '70s that both liberals  and 
conservatives struggled to respond to, starting with the sexual  revolution. 
"Accommodationists"—what we think of as liberal Christians,  Protestant and 
Catholic—weren't out to destroy Christianity. They saw their  mission as a 
noble 
one, preserving institutional Christianity in a new era.  Their choices 
ultimately emptied Christianity theologically, but they  intended to save the 
faith, or at the very least their own denomination. 
The danger for evangelicalism is becoming too  parachurch without enough 
church.
The heretics I write about aren't detached completely from  Christianity. 
Some of them identify as Christians and like the idea of  identifying with 
Jesus. But they aren't interested in sustaining any  historic Christian 
tradition or church apart from their own ministry. 
Instead of trying to reform and strengthen institutional  Christianity, 
they're picking through the Christian past, looking for things  they like and 
can use, and discarding the rest. 
Why do you claim that one of evangelicalism's contemporary  struggles is an 
alignment with former President George W. Bush?  
The Bush administration represented both the best and worst of  a broader 
evangelical reengagement in politics and culture. It was the  fulfillment of 
this post-1970s era when evangelicals reengaged with the  broader culture, 
returned to the halls of power, and left the fundamentalist  past behind. 
That you had an evangelical President and his speechwriter  drawing on Catholic 
social teaching to shape domestic policy was a  remarkable achievement, a 
sign of what you might call "the opening of the  evangelical mind." And some 
of the Bush administration's initiatives, such  as its aids in Africa 
efforts, made a real attempt to achieve a more  holistic Christian engagement 
in 
politics.  
But the administration exposed the limits of using politics to  effect 
broader cultural change. The Bush era was the moment when religious  
conservatives finally had one of their own in the White House, but it wasn't  a 
great 
era for evangelicalism or for institutional Christianity. But it's  pretty 
clear that institutional religion in the United States has lost more  ground 
than it's gained in the past 10 to 15 years. While evangelicalism is  
obviously quite robust, evangelical churches aren't growing as fast as they  
were 
during the 1970s and '80s. Instead of being a period of revival and  renewal 
for evangelical Christianity, the Bush era looks like a period when  
evangelical Christianity hit a ceiling. 
After 9/11, evangelicals were also particularly tempted toward  what I call 
the heresy of nationalism: that promoting democracy overseas by  force of 
arms would be God's will, which is at best a theologically perilous  idea, 
and at worst, explicitly heretical.  
How has Christianity historically tempered  nationalism? 
The idea that America has some distinctive role to play in the  unfolding 
of God's plan is compatible with orthodox Christianity. But it  should be 
tempered by recognizing that America is not the church. It's fine  to see 
ourselves as an "almost-chosen people," as Abraham Lincoln put it,  but if we 
decide we're literally chosen, then we've taken a detour away from  a healthy 
patriotism towards an unhealthy nationalism.  
Lincoln was not an orthodox Christian, but we can look at his  second 
inaugural address as a model for how Christians should think about  these 
issues. 
He was open to the idea that history unfolds in a providential  way, that 
the American Civil War could have theological as well as political  
significance.  
But he tempered that by emphasizing that providence and God's  purposes are 
mysterious. He emphasized that God simultaneously passed  judgment on North 
and South alike, that the war is a chastisement rather  than a pure 
apotheosis of the American idea. If you're too confident in  assuming that 
America's and God's purposes are one, you tiptoe toward  idolatry. 
Why do you say that Mormons and evangelicals can bridge  their divides 
through their love for the Constitution? 
Mormons and evangelicals share the temptations that come with  an admirable 
patriotism. There's a tendency for them to take patriotism one  step too 
far and say not only that the Constitution is a wonderful document,  but that 
it is divinely inspired. There's a reason so much of Mitt Romney's  campaign 
rhetoric has focused on "believe in America," singing "America the  
Beautiful," and so on. These kinds of gestures and emphases offer a way to  
ease 
evangelical doubts about his theology. In effect, he is saying,  "Whatever our 
different beliefs about the nature of the Trinity, we agree  that America 
is uniquely favored by God." 
Are there parallels between the desire to build an  "evangelical empire" 
and the desire to build up America as a Christian  nation?  
You could connect the prosperity gospel—especially its idea  that good 
Christians need never be poor—with Glenn Beck's view, that if  America had 
stayed true to its founding, then God would not have given us  the Great 
Recession 
But the nature of heresy is not that it takes a Christian  teaching and 
gets it completely wrong. Instead, it takes a Christian  teaching and 
emphasizes it to the exclusion of anything that might  counterbalance it. It 
isn't 
wrong to suggest that there are biblical  passages that state that God blesses 
his servants in this life as well as  the next. There are biblical passages 
that suggest a link between a nation's  morality, a nation's religious 
beliefs, and its historical fate.  
But Christian orthodoxy always counterbalances those emphases  with other 
truths. Sometimes God uses a pagan nation to bring forth his  justice. So you 
might succeed and prosper not because you are particularly  virtuous, but 
because you're that pagan nation, Babylon or Assyria, not King  David's 
Israel. You have to be aware of these possibilities. The same is  true for 
wealthy people, and obviously all blessings come from God. But  sometimes what 
you 
think of as "blessings" may be ill-gotten gains. Or the  guy who is 
suffering financially isn't suffering because he didn't pray hard  enough;  
he's 
Lazarus on your doorstep and you're the rich man who's  ignoring him.  
People write about Marilynne Robinson as a great  novelist, but they also 
say, 'And she's a Calvinist.' You want to live in a  world where that feels 
natural.
Why do you think evangelicals have been reticent to look  to the government 
while maintaining a robust political impulse? 
Evangelicals are less likely to look to a government program  for help, but 
they are more likely to see the election of particular  individuals as the 
key to fulfilling Christian purposes. Evangelicals have a  healthy 
skepticism of the efficacy of government, but they are tempted by  the delusion 
that 
if you just elect the right godly leader, deeper cultural  trends will 
change overnight. Or they see adverse trends as a result of  individual bad 
actors. Evangelicals were galvanized into politics in part by  a series of 
Supreme Court decisions, which were the work of five or six  people who you 
could 
point to and say, "He's the guy who took away prayer in  schools." This has 
given rise to the popular idea that cultural changes stem  from all these 
liberal, secular elites imposing themselves on a conservative  Christian 
population. But I don't think this view considers the role that  broader 
cultural 
and economic shifts have played in trends that conservative  Christians 
don't like. 
How can we begin to address a nation of heretics? 
There has been much healthy Catholic and Protestant dialogue  and 
cooperation during the past 30 years. But ultimately the success of U.S.  
Christianity depends on individual churches and confessions, not on  ecumenism 
for 
ecumenism's sake. Protestants and Catholics need to recognize  everything we 
have in common and then say we're also going to focus on  building separate 
effective churches.  
Christianity's failure in the United States is an  institutional failure, 
and the answer to institutional failure is stronger  institutions. America 
has more to gain from a more potent Protestantism and  Catholicism than it 
does from even the most fruitful Protestant-Catholic  dialogue.  
For evangelicals, it means thinking more seriously about  ecclesiology and 
what it will take to sustain Christianity across  generations. Promise 
Keepers, Campus Crusade for Christ, and other  parachurch groups have been 
important to evangelicalism. But "parachurch"  makes sense over the long term 
in 
the context of a church. The danger for  evangelicalism is becoming too 
parachurch without enough church. Some  megachurches seem to function like 
parachurches rather than churches, as  though everything else that's going on 
is 
more important than the central  life of the community of worship. It might 
be important for evangelicals to  think of themselves as Presbyterians, 
Baptists, and so on, and recover the  virtues of confessionalism, because it's 
confessions, not just superstar  pastors, that sustain Christianity over the 
long haul.   
How did you arrive at your final point: that Christians  can work to become 
more political without being partisan, ecumenical while  being 
confessional, moralistic while being holistic, and oriented toward  beauty? 
I tried to think about the attractive aspects of post-war  American 
Christianity that we have lost. Being political without being  partisan was 
crucial 
to the successes of the civil rights movement. Figures  like Billy Graham 
and Fulton Sheen were ecumenical but remained  confessional. And it was 
easier to be moralistic, but also holistic, in that  context because the 
country 
was not polarized on what we now think of as a  culture war.  
There are reasons why Christianity has lost some influence in  creative 
culture. You want to live in a world where the opening of a new  cathedral in a 
major American city is not only a religious event but also a  major 
architectural event. You want to live in a world where Christian  artists 
aren't 
going to be merely interesting eccentrics. People write about  Marilynne 
Robinson as a great novelist, but they also say, "And she's a  Calvinist." You 
want to live in a world where that feels natural.  
How do you adapt to cultural forces while maintaining  tradition? 
You have to address the issues and places where orthodoxy has  lost people 
over the past few decades without just saying, "We're losing  people here, 
so we just need to change this teaching or jettison this,"  which was the 
accommodationist answer. There's evidence to suggest that  churches that 
self-consciously surrender big chunks of Christian teaching  don't seem to 
thrive 
in the long run. Also, it has to be possible to be  Christian on contentious 
cultural issues without making it seem like  Christianity is just an 
appendage of the Republican Party.  
Finally, it's very important for contemporary Christians to be  ecumenical 
and to see the best in one another's congregations, but not at  the expense 
of having a robust, resilient internal culture within their own  churches. 
Lewis compares his "Mere Christianity" to a hallway with doors  opening into 
various rooms, which are the actual Christian churches. You  can't spend all 
your time in the hallway. You can go out into the hallway to  talk, but you 
have to go back in the rooms to  worship









-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
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